QMEMS enables smallest real-time clock

PORTLAND, Ore.  Epson Toyocom is claiming the smallest real-time clock chip fashioned by combining a quartz microelectromechanical system resonator with an ASIC. The chip was wire-bonded in the same 3.4-by-1.7-by-1-mm package.

Epson Toyocom's clock chip resonators are made by processing quartz wafers using photolithography, etching, metallization and sacrificial-layer removal--the same steps used to make silicon MEMS chips. Quartz is a piezoelectric material that naturally oscillates at a steady rate when activated with an electric current. Silicon MEMS chips require more signal conditioning to achieve equal performance.

Epson Toyocom's New Platform Oscillators combine a tiny, hermetically-sealed quartz crystal in the same package with the time-based ASIC.

The new clocks could be used in portable devices ranging from digital cameras and handheld medical devices to office and factory automation equipment. Their ultra-low standby power--as little as 0.22 microamps--allows the chips to keep time without using up battery power in portable devices.